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Some findings with the BTDR-2 (small reverb brick)

Started by culturejam, July 10, 2012, 12:08:52 AM

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gtr2

Quote from: jkokura on July 11, 2012, 05:54:37 PM
That's what I'm talkin about, but to a much subtler degree. Its not anything Ive done to create it, because my circuit is simply a modified extension of the data sheet, but that's the effect I perceive that I believe might be inherent in the block.

Jacob

is yours like this? check 2nd half of vid

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzJKRLGKhbs

Josh

1776 EFFECTS STORE     
Contract PCB designer

jkokura

JMK Pedals - Custom Pedal Creations
JMK PCBs *New Website*
pedal company - youtube - facebook - Used Pedals

Jack Deville

Logic.  And Cats.  And logical cats.

mc1545

hi-
i recently acquired an [older] belton btdr-1h and experienced the same strong
lfo modulation discussed here in the newer version. thought i'd share my "fix".
reference to the patent shows [indeed] an lfo
built around a single schmitt-trigger inverter. wishing to turn this off, i cracked
open the brick itself. this was easier than i'd imagined - not nearly full with epoxy
and the plastic parts quite soft. sure enough, the diagram in the patent turns out
to be seemingly identical to the actual object, albeit a smd board. finding the
lfo was pretty quick with a probe, and then some continuity tracing led me to the
resistor that feeds the lfo to the clock as a modulating signal. this turns out to
be r9 [clearly labeled] and i fine point soldering tip got the thing off, stopping
the modulation. it'd be easy to re-enable by replacing the SMD part with a bigger
one and a switch. i can send drawings to those who might be interested and
adventurous enough. no idea how easy this'd be with the newer, smaller bricks,
though they seem to be functionally identical.

-michael johnsen